While each person’s experience is unique, many people leave an EFT tapping session with a greater sense of calm, clarity, and emotional relief. By gently working through thoughts and feelings that may feel stuck or overwhelming, the process often helps reduce emotional intensity and bring the nervous system back into a more balanced state. Clients may walk away with: A greater sense of calm and emotional regulation
EFT tapping can be supportive for anyone who is looking for a gentle way to manage stress, process emotions, and create greater balance in their daily life. Because it works with both the mind and body, it can benefit people experiencing a wide range of everyday challenges. This practice may be especially helpful for individuals who: Feel stressed, overwhelmed, or emotionally drained
Each EFT tapping session is designed to provide a supportive and personalized experience. A typical session includes: One 45-minute guided EFT tapping session Time to identify and clarify the focus or challenge you would like to work through Guided tapping on specific acupressure points while bringing awareness to thoughts, emotions, or patterns connected to the issue Gentle support in helping the body and mind release emotional tension and calm the nervous system

Cave Creek, United States
15 years experience
If you’re here, you may not just be looking for better habits. You may be looking to feel like yourself again. Perhaps your body feels unpredictable. Maybe stress has quietly become your normal. Maybe illness, trauma, caregiving, or life transitions have left you feeling disconnected from your strength, your energy, or even your identity.
I understand that space deeply.
I’m Raye Gall, a Board Certified Health and Wellness Coach, 15-year yoga instructor, breathwork coach, autoimmune nutrition specialist, and practitioner of Emotional Freedom Technique (EFT). My work is rooted in both science and lived experience. Throughout my career, I have partnered alongside research teams connected with Mayo Clinic in cancer recovery and exercise, Banner Health and Arizona State University in cognitive health and movement research, and Arizona State University in collaboration with Phoenix Children’s Hospital in diabetes prevention initiatives. These experiences strengthened my understanding that sustainable wellness is not about quick fixes—it is about supporting the whole person.
But the most meaningful education I have received did not come from textbooks or research labs.
It came through walking through cancer. It came through navigating trauma. It came through seasons when my body did not feel safe and my sense of control felt uncertain. In those moments, I learned something foundational: our nervous system runs the show. When it feels overwhelmed, we feel overwhelmed. When it feels unsafe, we feel disconnected. When it is dysregulated, our sleep, digestion, immunity, habits, and mindset all follow.
So many people try to force change through willpower. They push harder. Restrict more. Add more rules. But healing rarely comes through force. It begins with restoring safety.
My approach to coaching centers on identity-based transformation and nervous system regulation. I guide individuals through rebuilding trust with their bodies, developing sustainable health habits, improving sleep hygiene, strengthening nutrition and hydration rhythms, and shifting thought patterns that keep them stuck. We focus on what is within your control, even when life feels chaotic. We work gently but intentionally. We build habits that match who you are becoming—not who you are trying to prove yourself to be.
Lasting change happens when identity shifts. When you begin to see yourself not as broken, but as rebuilding. Not as inconsistent, but as learning stability. Not as defeated, but as resilient. As that identity strengthens, your nervous system calms. Your choices align. Your confidence grows.
My work integrates evidence-based science with compassion. I believe the body was designed with remarkable intelligence and capacity for healing. While I respect research and clinical evidence deeply, I also believe there is a spiritual dimension to wellness. There is something sacred about the body’s ability to restore, adapt, and renew. Faith, for me, is not about perfection—it is about trust. Trust that we were created with resilience. Trust that growth is possible even after hardship. Trust that restoration is available.
When we reconnect with our authentic self—the part of us that is grounded, capable, and aligned—we begin to live differently. Health becomes less about fighting and more about stewarding. Habits become less about punishment and more about care. Change becomes less about pressure and more about purpose.
I work best with individuals who feel disconnected from their body, overwhelmed by stress, navigating chronic illness or autoimmune conditions, recovering from trauma, or simply tired of starting over. You do not need to be perfect. You do not need to have everything figured out. You simply need to be willing to take the next step.
Working with me feels supportive, structured, and steady. There is accountability, but never shame. There is science, but also compassion. There is strategy, but also grace. Together we restore safety first—because when safety returns, strength follows. And when strength returns, you begin to live fully again.
Restore Safety. Reclaim Strength. Live Fully.
You are not behind. You are not broken. You are not too late. Your body is communicating, not betraying. When we listen, regulate, nourish, and realign, transformation becomes sustainable.
If you are ready to reconnect with your authentic self, reclaim your health, and build meaningful change that lasts, I would be honored to walk alongside you.
You do not have to do this alone. Let’s begin.
"